Award-winning author Eddie Chuculate recounts his experience growing
up in rural Oklahoma, from boyhood to young manhood, in an evocative and
vivid voice.
"Granny was full-blooded Creek, but the Bureau of Indian Affairs
insisted she was fifteen-sixteenths. She showed her card to me. I'd sit
at the kitchen table and stare at her when she was eating, wondering how
you can be a sixteenth of anything."
Growing up impoverished and shuttled between different households, it
seemed life was bound to take a certain path for Eddie Chuculate.
Despite the challenges he faced, his upbringing was rich with love and
bountiful lessons from his Creek and Cherokee heritage, deep-rooted
traditions he embraced even as he learned to live within the culture of
white, small-town America that dominated his migratory childhood.
Award-winning author Eddie Chuculate brings his childhood to life with
spare, unflinching prose. This book is at once a love letter to his
Native American roots and an inspiring and essential message for young
readers everywhere, who are coming of age in an era when conversations
about acceptance and empathy, love and perspective are more necessary
than ever before.